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NOVEMBER 8–14 ONE WEEK (1970) “It’s my happening, and it freaks me out!” It’s back to the dawning of the swingin’ 70s, as groovy girl group The Carrie Nations, six hours after their L.A. arrival (previous gig: a senior prom) get that record contract from John Lazar’s freaky pop impresario Ronnie “Z-Man” Barzell; and then, despite hit after hit like “Sweet Talkin’ Candy Man” and “Look on up at the Bottom,” comes the inevitable power dive, to the accompaniment of parties shot like “Laugh-In,” toward the sex, drugs, violence and Malibu depths of Hollywood decadence, capped by a solemn-voiced narrator intoning the lessons learned in “the oft-times nightmarish world of Show Business.” This is no sequel to Jackie Susanne’s Dolls, but a Russ Meyer original — the first major studio (a desperate, we’ll-try-anything 20th Century Fox) project of the “King of the Nudies” (Mondo Topless, Vixen, and, of course, Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!) aimed to be “a satire, a serious melodrama, a rock musical, a comedy, a violent exploitation picture, a skin flick and a moralistic exposé” via a made-up-as-they-went-along script by Roger Ebert — yes, that Roger Ebert (probably the only skin flick ever written by a Pulitzer Prize winner), its bizarre tone achieved by Meyer dead-panning earnest discussions of motivation to sometimes suspicious actors (“If the actors perform as if they know they have funny lines, it won’t work”) and such outrageous bits as a beheading underscored with the Fox fanfare and a sleepy siren lip-locking with a .45. Its typically robust Meyer cast includes May ‘66 Playboy Playmate Dolly Read, December ‘68’s Cynthia Meyers, and ‘Soul Pet’ Marcia McBroom (a mere super-model) as the rockin’ chicks; Michael Blodgett (“the great pretty-boy creep of the early 70s” – Dave Kehr); Pam “Foxy Brown” Grier debuting in a party scene bit; Vixen’s Erica Gavin as a lesbian dress designer; and one-time Mrs. Meyer Edy Williams as a Rolls Royce lover — in both senses. (“There’s nothing like a Rolls . . . nothing . . . not even a Bentley!”) No wonder two prominent critics named it one of the ten best American films of the 60s and 70s!! GENE KELLY & STANLEY DONEN’S – VINCENT CANBY, NEW YORK TIMES LUIS BUÑUEL’S NOVEMBER 22-DECEMBER 5 TWO WEEKS --------------------- NOVEMBER 15-21 ONE WEEK --------------------- “BRILLIANT, ANARCHIC . . . HUGELY FUNNY.” KiNKiEST COMEDY THE PHANTOM OF LIBERTY SCREENPLAY BY BETTY COMDEN & ADOLPH GREEN A CRITERION PICTURES RELEASE OF A 20TH CENTURY FOX FILM 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40 This Is Not A Sequel. There Has Never Been Anything Like It. From the director of VIXEN and FASTER, PUSSYCAT! KILL! KILL! RUSS MEYER’S Beyond NEW 35mm PRINT! -- FIRST TIME EVER IN -DOLBY DIGITAL STEREO! (1974) “Long live chains!” shout Spanish prisoners (among them monk Luis Buñuel) about to be executed by Napoleon’s soldiers (an image evoking Goya’s “May 3, 1808“); drunk on sacramental wine, a French captain caresses the statue of a medieval knight’s wife, then opens her tomb to find . . . . “What is par-a-pher-nalia?” queries a 20th century nanny who’s been reading the preceding story; then a strange man gives the little girl she’s tending some seemingly obscene postcards, which drive parents Jean-Claude Brialy and Monica Vitti to disgust, then lust, but are revealed to be . . . The non-sequiturs keep on coming in 74-yearold Buñuel’s funniest (and penultimate) film, moving from constantly interrupted highlight to highlight: the elegant soirée with guests seated on gleaming toilet bowls, one man excusing himself to use the dining room; hard-drinking, poker-playing monks using religious medals as chips; a leather-clad maîtresse whipping the exposed buttocks of a bourgeois businessman, while in another room a high school boy makes love to his middle-aged aunt; a missing little girl who provides helpful tips to the cops searching for her; a Montparnasse sniper who walks out of his courtroom conviction to public acclaim; and a police crackdown at the zoo bringing everything full circle: “Long live chains!” … The exhilarating shock of the unexpected is heightened by cameos from some of France’s most famous actors, including Jean Rochefort, Michel Lonsdale and Michel Piccoli. “All that is most marvelous and poetic in surrealism at its best.“ – Vincent Canby, New York Times. NEW 35mm PRINT! A RIALTO PICTURES RELEASE. 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:20 (1952) Doo-de-doodoo . . . The switch to talkies proves a smooth one for Gene Kelly’s silent swashbuckler Don Lockwood (“Dignity! Always Dignity!” he declares, after flashbacks reveal his low beginnings as Western stuntman and third-rate hoofer), but the nasal screech of his screen inamorata, Jean Hagen’s Lina Lamont, calls for dubbing by Hollywood hopeful Debbie Reynolds, while sidekick Donald O’Connor knocks himself out (literally) to “Make ‘Em Laugh” and Kelly and Cyd Charisse dance TH the Broadway ballet to end all Broadway ballets. Voted one of the 10 Best Films of All Time in a 2002 international critics’ poll, Singin’ in the Rain boasts more great song, dance and joie de vivre (especially in the iconic title number) than just about any other musical, and, as written by Broadway wunderkinds/über-buffs Betty Comden & Adolph Green, it’s also the funniest movie of all movies about movies. But it was no instant classic — the six-months-older An American in Paris was the new gold standard for musicals and the frothier, much-less-self-important Rain got shafted at Oscar theValley of the Dolls time (only Hagen and its musical score were even nominated) — and, in fact, Comden & Green originally balked at the assignment: to devise a story around the songs of Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed, the latter, not-so-coincidentally, the project’s producer. First pondering a singing cowboy saga for Howard Keel, the writers’ lightbulb came on when they realized the songs worked best in their own era (roughly 1928 to 1931, during that shaky silenceto-sound transition), an idea that excited both themselves and old pals Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, who’d already co-directed the movie version of their Broadway smash On the Town. Fifty years later, Singin’ in the Rain is still to most people what Pauline Kael called it: “Just about the best Hollywood musical of all time.” This vibrant new 35mm print (from a negative derived from the original 3-strip Technicolor separations) uses the film’s original multi-track orchestral recordings (originally mixed into mono) to create true Dolby digital stereo for the very first time! ~ 50 . ANNIVERSARY! ~ A WARNER BROS. RELEASE. 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 DECEMBER 6 – 19 THE MOVING IMAGE, INC. NEW 35mm PRINT! DECEMBER 15 SUN T WO W E E K S ALTMAN’S 209 WEST HOUSTON STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10014 70s BUY TICKETS ONLINE! www.film forum.co m 3 – OCTOBER 10 FOUR BER 1 WEE TEM KS SEP SEPT – DEC 20 W William YLER Mor ton St Assistive listening devices ar e available upon r equest. Please see Manager. Late-comers will be seated at the discr etion of the Manager. HOUSTON St St l rS t STR EE T St ✪ ck e an UE) St AV E N g (6TH in D ou ga e wn S ul liv E A Spring St on om ps IC AS Vandam St Th Charlton St AM ER King St OF TH E A copy of our latest financial r epor t may be obtained by writing to: NYS Dept. of State, Of fice of Charities Registration, Albany, NY 12231. 1/2 in Do AV E A l i c e Arlen Kathr yn McGraw Ber r y Kar en Cooper Nancy Dine Andr ew Fierber g Adaline Fr elinghuysen Seth Gelblum David Gr ubin Maur een Hayes Lar r y Kamer man Richar d Lorber Ned Lor d, C h a i r m a n Jim Mann Joy Mar cus Nisha Gupta McGr eevy Mira Nair Sheila Nevins Car ole Rifkind Peter Saraf Alexandra Shiva Andr ea Taylor Shelley Wanger Br uce Weber WEST rm ST BOARD OF DIRECTORS Photofest Rialto Pictures Sandcastle 5 Productions Kino International Ca VARICK Br uce Goldstein SEVENTH Clarkson St PHOTOS COURTESY B le e St Gates Sisters Studio REPERTORY PROGRAMMING F /V d DESIGN DIRECTOR OF for Kar en Cooper Bed Leroy St FILM FORUM PUBLIC FUNDERS THE NYS COUNCIL ON THE ARTS THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS A/C E St V Br uce Goldstein Michael Jeck Har ris Dew M ac NOTES DIRECTOR REVIVALS 02 REPERTOR&Y P ri nc eS t C/E FILM FORUM 209 West Houston Street, New York, NY 10014 SUBWAYS 1/2 to Houston St. C/E to Spring St. A/C/E/F/V to West 4th St. Film For um 2 is a publication of The Moving Image, Inc., published 3 times a year. 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JOIN TODAY. ❑ I would like to become a Friend of Film Forum at the following level: ❑ $65* ❑ $95* ❑ $150 ❑ $300 ❑ $550 ❑ $1,000 *PRICES TAKE EFFECT OCTOBER 1. ❑ Enclosed is my check made payable to The Moving Image, Inc. ❑ Please charge my credit card: ❑ AMEX ❑ MasterCard ❑ Visa ❑ Discover ❑ Diner’s Club ❑ JCB Card # Expiration Date Signature (required) ❑ I cannot join at this time, but please add my name to the mailing list. ❑ Enclosed is $ as a donation (fully tax-deductible). ( AS CITY/STATE/ZIP (1979) In an icy post-apocalyptic world, hunter Paul Newman and pregnant Brigitte Fossey wander into a frozen city (filmed in actually freezing conditions in Montreal’s abandoned Expo ‘67), where the principal occupation of the inhabitants — among them Fernando Rey and Bibi Andersson — is playing the board game Quintet. Second prize: death. 1:30, 6:05 THREE WOMEN DECEMBER 10 TUE THREE WOMEN IMAGES DECEMBER 8 SUN (1977) Texas working girls link up as Sissy Spacek gets a job at a California desert old age home and gets taken under the wing of her singles’ complex roommate, social butterfly wannabe Shelley Duvall. But when they meet embittered artist Janice Rule, things start to get increasingly fantastical. “In the Altman canon, no picture is stranger — and more fascinating.”– Michael Sragow, The New Yorker. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 DECEMBER 11/12 WED/THU NASHVILLE (1975) As the disembodied voice of Replacement Party candidate Hal Phillip Walker echoes from his omnipresent sound truck, the fates of twenty-four characters interlock en route to a giant political rally in the country music capital. Altman’s exhilarating kaleidoscope of music, religion and politics is “an orgy for movie lovers” (Pauline Kael). With Ronee Blakely, Lily Tomlin, Ned Beatty, Keith Carradine, Karen Black, Barbara Harris, Shelley Duvall, Geraldine Chaplin, et al. 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 H.E.A.L.T.H. (1973) Raymond Chandler Altman-style, as Elliott Gould’s Philip Marlowe — in 70s L.A. but still driving a ’48 Lincoln — encounters Sterling Hayden’s boozy novelist, mysterious Nina Van Pallandt and Mark Rydell’s Coke-bottle-wielding hood, while searching for pal (ex-Yankee) Jim Bouton. 3:10, 7:30 (1970) Surgical hijinks, as ace Army cutters Donald Sutherland, Elliott Gould, and Tom Skerritt subvert the Korean War, drive Robert Duvall nuts, check out Sally Kellerman’s natural hair color, and have fun with syringes during an epic football game. Oscar-winning screenplay by Ring Lardner, Jr. 1:00, 5:20, 9:40 DECEMBER 19 THU BREWSTER MCCLOUD DECEMBER 13/14 FRI/SAT BREWSTER MCCLOUD DAYTIME TEL E-MAIL Membership benefits are valid for one year from date of purchase. Membership cards are non-transferable. Film Forum qualifies for many matching gift programs. Please check with your employer. Questions? Call the Membership Coordinator: 212-627-2035. Mail to: Film Forum, attn: Membership, 209 W. Houston St., NY, NY 10014 H . E . A . L . T. H . (1976) ...or Sitting Bull’s History Lesson. Paul Newman’s Buffalo Bill sells the West of legend, assisted by press agent Joel Grey, while Will Sampson’s Sitting Bull provides an omnipresent silent rebuke and Bur t Lancaster’s Ned Buntline contemplates what he has wrought. 1:00, 5:20, 9:40 THIEVES LIKE US (1979) Unlikely couple romantic comedy as a computer matches up uptight, dominated-by-Dad Paul Dooley with reedthin singer Marta Heflin, caught up in rock group Keepin’ ‘em Off the Streets. 3:25, 7:30 (APT #) (1974) Manic Elliott Gould and gloomy George Segal team up for action and Fruit Loops, from the poker table to the track to the fights to Vegas for craps, roulette and blackjack in obsessive search of that one big score. Altman’s “celebration of gambling” and his first use of multi-track stereo. 3:20, 7:40 BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS M*A*S*H A PERFECT COUPLE APPEARS ON CREDIT CARD ) CALIFORNIA SPLIT DECEMBER 17/18 TUE/WED CALIFORNIA SPLIT THE LONG GOODBYE (1979) Backroom shenanigans abound as the wackos converge at a health food convention at a Florida hotel in this biting satire, its incredible cast including Lauren Bacall, Carol Burnett, James Garner, Glenda Jackson, and Dick Cavett — but stolen outright by Alfre Woodard’s long-suffering hotel manager. 1:25, 5:30, 9:40 NAME ADDRESS (1978) Altman tops his own Nashville record as 48 characters come together for a suburban Chicago wedding, with bride’s mom Carol Burnett being romanced by groom’s uncle, king-sized Pat McCormick; groom Desi Arnaz Jr. getting a cold shower wake-up; strung-out groom’s mom Nina Van Pallandt nodding off at her own party; and — just who is the father of bride’s sister Mia Farrow’s baby? 3:45, 8:20 QUINTET (1972) Children’s book author Susannah York (Best Actress, Cannes), off for a weekend in the country with hubbie Rene Auberjonois, spots dead ex-lover Marcel Bozzuffi at the airport, and then things go way out of control, as characters morph into one another and York kills...whom? “Altman controls things beautifully, borrowing shock effects from the thriller genre . . . brilliantly shot by Vilmos Zsigmond, superbly acted.” – Geoff Andrew, Time Out (London). 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 DECEMBER 9 MON MEMBERSHIP BENEFITS! (1971) As Leonard Cohen warbles in the background, the Western town of Presbyterian Church goes up around Warren Beatty’s cocky gambler and Julie Christie’s opium-puffing madam, as they link up personally and professionally — but then corporate interests move in, with a memorable showdown in a driving blizzard. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 A WEDDING SPECIAL THANKS TO WREN ARTHUR (SANDCASTLE 5 PRODUCTIONS); JOHN KIRK, IRENE RAMOS, LATANYA TAYLOR (MGM); SHAWN BELSTON (20TH CENTURY FOX); STEVE TURNEY (EQUATOR FILMS, LONDON); RICHARD MAY, JEFFREY GOLDSTEIN, LINDA EVANS-SMITH, MARILEE WOMACK (WARNER BROS.); ANNE GOODMAN (CRITERION); MICHAEL SCHLESINGER, SUSANNE HOLZMAN (COLUMBIA); AND TOM MOLEN (PARAMOUNT). IMAGES McCABE AND MRS. MILLER (1974) Escaped cons Bert Remsen, John Schuck, and protégé Keith Carradine hole up at a rural gas station before going on the bank robbery route, but Carradine and station owner’s daughter Shelley Duvall find love. Second, more faithful adaptation of Edward Anderson’s novel (after Nick Ray’s They Live By Night), with the 30s effortlessly recreated by all-Mississippi location shooting. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 NEW 35MM PRINT! (1970) In the then-wondrous Houston Astrodome’s fallout shelter, Bud Cort (Harold and Maude) is building massive wings to take an indoor flight, watched over by mysterious protector Sally Kellerman; spoilsports tend to end up bird-poop-strewn corpses. Altman’s quirkiest movie, complete with Bullitt parody, ornithology lecturer Rene Auberjonois, and Shelley Duvall in her film (and Altman) debut. This is its first new 35mm print since its original release! 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 A WEDDING